Turner Monica G, Smithwick Erica A H, Metzger Kristine L, Tinker Daniel B, Romme William H
Department of Zoology, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI 53706, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Mar 20;104(12):4782-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0700180104. Epub 2007 Mar 2.
Understanding ecosystem processes as they relate to wildfire and vegetation dynamics is of growing importance as fire frequency and extent increase throughout the western United States. However, the effects of severe, stand-replacing wildfires are poorly understood. We studied inorganic nitrogen pools and mineralization rates after stand-replacing wildfires in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem, Wyoming. After fires that burned in summer 2000, soil ammonium concentration peaked in 2001 (33 mg NH(4)-N x kg(soil)(-1)); soil nitrate increased subsequently (2.7 mg NO(3)-N.kg(soil)(-1) in 2003) but was still low. However, annual net ammonification rates were largely negative from 2001 to 2004, indicating ammonium depletion. Thus, although net nitrification rates were positive, annual net nitrogen mineralization (net ammonification plus net nitrification) remained low. Aboveground net primary production (ANPP) increased from 0.25 to 1.6 Mg x ha(-1) x yr(-1) from 2001 to 2004, but variation in ANPP among stands was not related to net nitrogen mineralization rates. Across a broader temporal gradient (stand age zero to >250 yr), negative rates of net annual ammonification were especially pronounced in the first postfire year. Laboratory incubations using (15)N isotope pool dilution revealed that gross production of ammonium was reduced and ammonium consumption greatly exceeded gross production during the initial postfire years. Our results suggest a microbial nitrogen sink for several years after severe, stand-replacing fire, confirming earlier hypotheses about postdisturbance succession and nutrient cycling in cold, fire-dominated coniferous forests. Postfire forests in Yellowstone seem to be highly conservative for nitrogen, and microbial immobilization of ammonium plays a key role during early succession.
随着美国西部火灾发生频率和范围的增加,了解与野火和植被动态相关的生态系统过程变得愈发重要。然而,严重的、导致林分更替的野火的影响却鲜为人知。我们研究了怀俄明州大黄石生态系统中林分更替野火后的无机氮库和矿化率。在2000年夏季发生火灾后,土壤铵浓度在2001年达到峰值(33毫克NH₄-N×千克土壤⁻¹);土壤硝酸盐随后增加(2003年为2.7毫克NO₃-N·千克土壤⁻¹),但仍处于较低水平。然而,2001年至2004年期间,年净氨化率大多为负值,表明铵被消耗。因此,尽管净硝化率为正值,但年净氮矿化(净氨化加净硝化)仍然较低。地上净初级生产力(ANPP)从2001年到2004年从0.25增加到1.6 毫克·公顷⁻¹·年⁻¹,但不同林分间ANPP的变化与净氮矿化率无关。在更广泛的时间梯度(林分年龄从零到超过250年)上,净年氨化率的负值在火灾后的第一年尤为明显。使用¹⁵N同位素池稀释法进行的实验室培养表明,在火灾后的最初几年里,铵的总产生量减少,铵的消耗量大大超过总产生量。我们的结果表明,在严重的、导致林分更替的火灾后的几年里,微生物会吸收氮,这证实了早期关于寒冷、以火为主的针叶林干扰后演替和养分循环的假设。黄石公园火灾后的森林似乎对氮高度保守,铵的微生物固定在早期演替过程中起关键作用。